
Nadege Green
Nadege Greencovers social justice issues for WLRN.
For her, journalism boils down to not only telling the stories of the people who are accessible, but also seeking out the voices we don't hear from, and telling those stories too.
Her work was received numerous awards, including a 2017 Regional Edward R. Murrow Award (Planning Funerals For Children Lost To Gun Violence), 2016 first place investigative reporting award from the National Association of Black Journalists and Florida AP Broadcaster awards.
In 2018 Green was recognized by the Miami Foundation with the Ruth Shack Leadership award for her body of work that gives voice to communities that are often not heard.
Green's reporting has appeared in the Miami Herald,NPR and PRI. Her work has also been cited in Teen Vogue, The Root, Refinery 29 and the Washington Post.
Shepreviously worked at the Miami Herald covering city governments and the Haitian community. Greenstudied English with a specialization in professional writing at Barry University.
Follow her on Twitter @nadegegreen
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It started with a handful of students in Parkland that spoke up after a shooter gunned down 17 of their peers and faculty at their school. Then hundreds...
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Students from across the country are planning to participate in a coordinated national walkout on Wednesday in response to the high school shooting in...
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Since the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, alumni from around the country are coming back home. They say in this painful moment for...
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After several news stories highlighted that Publix routinely denies employees access to HIV prevention medication and growing outcry on social media,...
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After I reported a story about the popularity of Manischewitz wine in Caribbean communities during the holidays, many of our readers and listeners...
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Gender equality is one of the issues at the forefront of the national conversation right now, and that’s what an art show at Brickell City Centre is...
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Days after Hurricane Irma battered South Florida, Rufus James walked through his Liberty City neighborhood in Miami looking for paid work to chop down...
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Low-wage jobs in Florida are one of the main reasons families live in poverty or near poverty, according to a new study by Florida International...
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Women in Miami-Dade earn 87 cents for every dollar a man makes. One in five women in Miami-Dade lives in poverty. The Women's Fund of Miami-Dade wants...
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Heidy Rodriguez, 17, created an LGBTQ support group at her Miami-Dade high school when she realized that like her, many of her friends needed a place to...